Gut Microbial Metabolite-Mediated Regulation of the Intestinal Barrier in the Pathogenesis of Inflammatory Bowel Disease
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Epithelial Barrier in Inflammatory Bowel Disease
2.1. Structure and Function of the Epithelial Barrier
2.2. Dysregulation of the Gut Barrier in IBD
3. Gut Metabolites in Inflammatory Bowel Disease
3.1. Why Study Gut Metabolites in IBD?
3.2. Metabolomics Techniques to Study Gut Metabolites
3.2.1. Targeted and Untargeted Approaches
3.2.2. Techniques
3.2.3. Sample Types and Sample Processing
3.2.4. Data Pre-Processing and Analysis
3.3. Gut Metabolome Changes in IBD
3.3.1. Overview of Clinical Studies
3.3.2. Faecal Metabolomics as a Diagnostic or Prognostic Tool for IBD
Study | Patient Groups | Metabolomics Technique | Upregulated Metabolites | Downregulated Metabolites |
---|---|---|---|---|
Le Gall et al., 2011 [52] | UC (n = 13), IBS (n = 10), Healthy (n = 22) | 1H NMR | In UC: Taurine, Cadaverine, Glucose and Choline | In UC: 2-methylbutyrate |
Walton et al., 2013 [55] | Healthy (n = 19), CD (n = 22) and UC (n = 20) | GC-MS | In CD versus healthy: Butanoic aid, 1-propanol, propanoic acid, butanoic acid, indole | |
Bjerrum et al., 2015 [69] | UC (n = 48), CD (n = 44), Healthy (n = 21) | 1H NMR | In active CD and active UC: Amino acids In active UC: Lactate, Taurine | In active CD: Butyrate and Propionate |
De Preter et al., 2015 [71] | Healthy (n = 40), CD (n = 83), UC (n = 68) | GC-MS | In CD: 1-ethyl3-methylbenzene, benzene acetaldehyde, phenol, 2-methyl propanal, carbon disulfide and 1-methoxy-4-methylbenzene In UC: cyclohexane, 3-methyl butanal and pyrrole | In CD and UC: Medium chain fatty acids, Protein fermentation metabolites In UC only: Furan, 5-methyl-2-furancarboxaldehyde and 3,4-dimethylthiophene |
Jacobs et al., 2016 [74] | Paediatric IBD patients (n = 36), Healthy family (n = 56) | UPLC- ToFMS | Amino acid derivatives and bile acids | Stercobilin, Acetyl-glutamic acid and boldione |
Ahmed et al., 2016 [72] | Healthy (n = 109), CD (n = 117) and UC (n = 100) | GC-MS | In active CD: 1-octen-3-ol, heptanal, propanal, benzeneacetaldehyde, 6-methyl-2-heptanone and decane | In active CD: Pentanoic acid, 2-methyl butanoic acid, methanethiol, 3-methylphenol |
Santoru et al., 2017 [62] | Healthy (n = 51), UC (n = 82) and CD (n = 50) | 1H NMR, GC-MS and LC-QToF-MS | In CD: Alanine, phenylacetic acid, glyceric acid, phenylethylamine, putrescine and cadaverine, diacylglycerols In UC: Cadaverine, alanine, 4-hydroxyphenylacetic acid, 4-aminovaleric acid, TMAO, diacylglycerols | In CD and UC: Vitamins, 3-methyladipic acid, 5β-coprostanol, 3-hydroxybutyric acid, 2-hydroxy-3-methyvaleric acid and hydrocinnamic acid, urobilinogen |
Kolho et al., 2017 [70] | Healthy (n = 14), IBD (n = 23) | UPLC-MS/MS | In UC: Amino acids, citrulline, ornithine, creatinine, choline, kynurenine, taurine, normetanephrin | In UC: Cytosine |
Alghamdi et al., 2018 [56] | Healthy (n = 11) and CD (n = 11) | LC-MS | C20 Sphingenine, octadecenoylsphingenine, Sphingomyelins, LCFAs | Ornithine isomer, Tyrosine |
Weng et al., 2019 [73] | Healthy (n = 42), UC (n= 107) and CD (n = 173) | GC/MS, LC-NEG/MS, and LC-POS/MS | In UC and CD: LCFAs, MCFAs, bile acids, and vitamins In UC versus healthy: Glycochenodeoxycholate and glycolithocholic acid | |
Franzosa et al., 2019 [63] | Healthy (n = 34), CD (n = 68), UC (n = 53) | LC-MS (combination of 4 techniques) | In CD versus healthy: Sphingolipids, carboximidic acids, bile acids, lactate | In UC and CD: Triterpenoids and LCFAs, triacylglycerols, pantothenate |
Lloyd Price et al., 2019 [64] | 132 subjects (non-IBD, UC and CD) | LC-MS (combination of 4 techniques) | In CD versus non-IBD: Polyunsaturated fatty acids, Nicotinuric acid, Bile acids, acylcarnitine | Vitamins, Lithocholate and deoxycholate, SCFAs |
4. Gut Metabolites as Key Regulators of Epithelial Barrier Function in IBD
4.1. Short Chain Fatty Acids
4.2. Tryptophan Metabolites
4.3. Bile Acid Metabolites
4.4. Vitamins
Metabolite | Microbial Source in the Gut | Mammalian Receptors | Effect on the Intestinal Epithelial Barrier |
---|---|---|---|
Short chain Fatty acids Butyrate, Acetate, Propionate, Lactate, Succinate, Valerate, etc. | Butyrate: Clostridium clusters I, III, IV, XI, XIVa, XV, and XVI [90] Acetate: Bacteroides spp. and Prevotella spp. Propionate: Bacteroides spp., Veillonella spp., Dialister spp. or Ruminococcus spp. [91] | Butyrate: GPR41, GPR109A, GPR65 (predicted) Acetate: GPR43 Propionate: GPR 41, GPR43 Lactate: GPR81 Succinate: GPR91 [92] |
|
Bile acids Cholic acid, Lithocholic acid (LCA), Deoxycholic acid (DCA), Ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA) etc. | Bacteroides spp., Eubacterium spp., Lactobacillus spp. and Clostridium spp. [115] | Farnesoid X receptor (FXR), GPBAR-1/TGR5, Pregnane X receptor (PXR), Vitamin D receptor (VDR), [115] |
|
Tryptophan metabolites Kynurenic acid, hydroxytryptamine, Indole derivatives | Lactobacillus spp., Clostridium spp. and Bacteroides spp. | GPR35 (predicted), Aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AHR), Pregnane X receptor (PXR) [106,111] |
|
4.5. Other Metabolites
4.5.1. Medium and Long Chain Fatty Acids
4.5.2. Sulfur-Containing Metabolites
4.5.3. Polyamines
4.5.4. Polyphenol Metabolites
5. Future Perspectives
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Iyer, N.; Corr, S.C. Gut Microbial Metabolite-Mediated Regulation of the Intestinal Barrier in the Pathogenesis of Inflammatory Bowel Disease. Nutrients 2021, 13, 4259. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu13124259
Iyer N, Corr SC. Gut Microbial Metabolite-Mediated Regulation of the Intestinal Barrier in the Pathogenesis of Inflammatory Bowel Disease. Nutrients. 2021; 13(12):4259. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu13124259
Chicago/Turabian StyleIyer, Namrata, and Sinéad C. Corr. 2021. "Gut Microbial Metabolite-Mediated Regulation of the Intestinal Barrier in the Pathogenesis of Inflammatory Bowel Disease" Nutrients 13, no. 12: 4259. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu13124259
APA StyleIyer, N., & Corr, S. C. (2021). Gut Microbial Metabolite-Mediated Regulation of the Intestinal Barrier in the Pathogenesis of Inflammatory Bowel Disease. Nutrients, 13(12), 4259. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu13124259